PATTON — An Altoona man is facing theft and criminal mischief charges after police said he disassembled a picnic table to use the wood to build a shed.
Prince Gallitzin State Park authorities discovered Jeffery Allen Frederick, 23, of the 500 block of 11th Street in Altoona, loading his Dodge Caravan on May 15 with wood taken from a park picnic table.
According to a criminal complaint filed at District Judge Michael Zungali’s office in Hastings, park Ranger Joseph Eckenrod was on routine patrol in the Muskrat Beach area. He observed wooden pieces from a picnic table on top of the van, and Frederick loading the vehicle.
Eckenrod questioned Frederick about the activity, and Frederick said he was taking the table to build a shed for his stepchildren.
Frederick’s girlfriend and kids were with him at the time.
Park Manager Dan Bickel, who assisted Eckenrod, said the picnic table was one of a group of tables stacked in the beach parking lot awaiting distribution throughout the park area for summer use.
“I guess (Frederick) thought they were free for the taking,” Bickel said.
“It happened in broad daylight.”
Bickel said it is not often that the park’s law enforcement has to file criminal charges against a patron.
“People are usually here to recreate, not take part in a crime,” Bickel said. “This is a rare occurrence, and we probably only have about a dozen incidents like this a year.”
He said about 300 to 400 picnic tables are located throughout the park, and are valued at about $300 each.
Frederick is scheduled to appear in front of Zungali at a preliminary hearing June 24.
Local News
Altoona man accused of taking apart Prince Gallitzin State Park picnic table to use wood
- Local News
-
-
Pa. gas drilling fee bill debate ends without vote
Pennsylvania, the only major gas-producing state that does not tax the taking of natural gas from its soil, moved closer Tuesday to imposing a fee on the drilling in the vast Marcellus Shale reserves that have transformed the state in recent years.
-
$27.1B budget proposed
Gov. Tom Corbett on Tuesday proposed a budget of $27.1 billion, with no tax increases, deep cuts to higher education assistance and a range of cost-cutting in services for the poor, elderly and disabled.
-
Blogging with heart
I've got so much stuff for this Sunday's American Heart Month package, that some of the stories will spill over onto Monday. But I don't know what to leave out, or hold for the next week, so it looks like a double hit this week.
-
Universities face steep cuts
State universities still trying to recover from deep cuts last year would have their public funding slashed even further under a budget plan unveiled Tuesday, leading some institutions to warn of a choice between maintaining buildings and offering academic programs students need to graduate.
-
Plan hurts middle class, local Democrats contend
While members of his own party praised Gov. Tom Corbett’s fiscal restraint, some local Democratic lawmakers said the Republican’s proposed budget panders to corporate interests while inflicting pain on the middle class.
-
Detour hurting some Portage businesses
Craig Mazzarese’s business depends heavily on drive-by customers, but since last week fewer drive-bys have been stopping
-
Local airport funding intact
Airport leaders here are breathing sighs of relief after Congress approved funding to support local commercial air service through 2015.
-
With state revenue tight, Westmont seeks school budget input
The Westmont Hilltop school board on Tuesday night held a public forum at the middle school to explain why the district, already one of the most efficient in the state, must raise taxes each year.
-
In brief: Commissioners plan to meet at schools
Cambria County’s three new commissioners, carrying out plans to take meetings into communities, have scheduled five of their meetings this year in high school auditoriums throughout the county.
-
Slide prompts authority to reroute water
A landslide on Franklin Hill has prompted the Cambria Somerset Authority to shut a water line alongside it, fearing further issues could damage the line.
- More Local News Headlines
-






